The popularity of newly elected President Barack Obama combined with the willingness of most voters to give him the benefit of the doubt is a powerful political force working in favor of the economic rescue plan now being debated on Capitol Hill.

These competing forces have created a political tug-of-war in Congress that is making passage of the stimulus bill more difficult than many ever expected.

The tension between these competing forces is highlighted by the views of unaffiliated voters. A majority of unaffiliateds approve of the way the new president is doing his job. At the same time, a majority of unaffiliateds believes that more government spending is generally bad for the economy. This puts elected politicians from competitive states and districts in the spot they hate the most: Having to make a decision when there's no clearly safe political answer.

It remains a mystery why the president was not more involved in selling the rescue package from the beginning. Letting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid take the lead early on gave the Republican opposition time to emphasize the large amount of new government spending Democrats have packed into the legislation.

Now, to help the pro-stimulus team in the tug of war, Obama has scheduled a Monday night prime-time press conference and several campaign-style stops next week to target wavering legislators. It is likely the president’s efforts will build some support, at least temporarily, for the legislation.

The big unknown is how congressional Democrats will play out their hand. It is possible that their positioning on the topic of more government spending could cancel out any benefits from Obama’s sales effort.

Democrats in Congress also could strengthen the anti-stimulus team by their approach to the plan’s tax cuts. Obama campaigned heavily on a promise to cut taxes for 95% of Americans, congressional Republicans support the notion, and 57% of voters see tax cuts as good for the economy.Forty-five percent (45%) of voters would support a stimulus package with no new spending and a round of tax cuts. Just 15% support a spending-only approach to the rescue plan.

When Obama first proposed the rescue plan, it included $325 billion in tax cuts. House Democrats cut this to $275 billion to make way for more new spending. The version of the plan the Senate is expected to pass early this week will cut away some of that spending in favor of tax cuts, but Pelosi has already vowed to fight these changes.

When all is said and done, though, it's basically a tug-of-war between a president with high job approval ratings and a public’s generic skepticism about government spending.

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